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Happy Talk On Medical Malpractice Reform

What a welcome headline to see in the New York Times:

Obama Open to Reining in Medical Suits

In closed-door talks, Mr. Obama has been making the case that reducing malpractice lawsuits — a goal of many doctors and Republicans — can help drive down health care costs, and should be considered as part of any health care overhaul, according to lawmakers of both parties, as well as A.M.A. officials.

Wow. Yay. Crisis over, let’s move on to something else now.

Or maybe not.

Senator Max Baucus of Montana, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, is expected to outline his proposal for a health care overhaul this week, and aides said liability protection for doctors is not part of the plan.

So, I’m guessing that Obama’s talk about supporting med mal reform runs about as deep as his comitment to gay rights. Which is to say that he’ll put out some happy talk about it to appease a necessary constituency but won’t twist any arms or spend any capital in Congress to actually make it happen.

Worse, the semi-concrete proposals I have seen don’t look like they’ll offer much protection. Jon Cohn at TNR links to a summary of a few options:

Win-Win-Win on Malpractice Reform? – The Treatment

Disclosure-and-offer programs, in which health care providers disclose unanticipated outcomes of care to patients and make prompt offers of compensation. Patients do not waive their right to sue by accepting the offer, but reportedly, few go on to file lawsuits.

It’s hard to see this as reform at all. Disclosures are nothing new any more, and it’s always been good tactics to make an offer of compensation if there actually was substandard care. I doubt this will be embraced by the medical community, since when you do a disclosure you’re basically giving a potential plaintiff a roadmap for their future lawsuit. You’re basically relying on their sense of decency to avert a suit, and how that fact can be altered I cannot imagine. Another commonly cited option would be to:

create a federal “safe harbor,” retaining the current process of adjudication but insulating physicians from liability if they adhered to evidence-based medical practices. For example, legislation introduced by Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) in February would create a rebuttable presumption that care was not negligent if the physician followed accepted clinical practice guidelines.

Sound great, but good luck applying that standard. Consider Whitecoat’s trial, in which the case seems to be hinging on the fact that the got the right diagnosis and performed the right treatment, but he may or may not have done so in a timely fashion. Presuming there even exist “guidelines” for a particular condition or presentation, there are so many technical variables in the execution of the care under these guidelines that I don’t see how juries could be expected to put this into practice.

Consider a child with meningococcemia. It’s a no-brainer that a child with this deadly infection needs to be given antibiotics as soon as possible to have a chance to survive, and there’s probably a guideline out there that makes reference to “urgent” or “timely” administration of antibiotics. So, if a kid comes into my ER with a fever and petechiae and I don’t get the Rocephin in for, say ninety minutes, was that timely enough? Or maybe the kid didn’t have the rash on presentation, but at hour three of an extended ER work-up the rash is noted and then antibiotics are given? Or maybe I was too rushed, stupid or negligent to notice the rash and didn’t give antibiotics till hour three. My point is that it’s meaningless to say that “guidelines were followed” when it’s impossible to write guidelines that cover every clinical circumstance. Worse, if implemented narrowly, the “safe harbor” would offer very very little protection, and if construed broadly, it would make it very difficult to actually distinguish negligent care from good care.

The reason I’m spending so much time on this point is that this proposal has had explicit endorsement from Obama himself, his Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and his physician brother, Ezekiel Emanuel, and key legislators like Senator Ron Wyden. It sounds great, but it too is just “Happy Talk.”

The last option cited is the classic option of moving med mal cases to specialized health care courts of some variety. I’ve always thought this had great potential, but there doesn’t seem to be any political support for it and it would certainly be fought tooth and nail by the trial lawyer’s association.

So it’s looking more and more like health care reform, if enacted at all, will probably not include any meaningful or effective national solution to the ongoing malpractice crisis. Plenty of “Happy Talk,” but no action and no solutions. Not that I really expected any, coming from a Democratic President and a Democratic Congress, but hope does spring eternal.

*This blog post was originally published at Movin' Meat*

Trial Lawyers Fight For Status Quo In Healthcare

In a surprise, President Obama has signaled a willingness to discuss medical liability as part of the health reform process.

Good for him for standing up to the trial lawyers, a core constituency of the left.

That’s a good sign, as the costs of defensive medicine brought on by the broken malpractice system, should be addressed if there is any hope of reducing health care spending.

Trial lawyers like to say that medical malpractice represents “less than one percent of the cost of health care,” but that fails to account for the substantial sum attributed to defensive medicine doctors practice to avoid the threat of malpractice, estimated to be $210 billion annually.

Furthermore, the argument that malpractice reform will harm patients “by limiting their ability to seek compensation through the courts” doesn’t hold water either.

That’s because the current system does a miserable job of compensating patients for medical errors, where more than 50 cents on every compensated dollar goes to pay lawyers and the courts. Not to mention that a typical malpractice trial may last years before an injured patient receives a single penny.

So, don’t believe the arguments of the trial lawyers, who prefer the financial security of the status quo.

Any alternative system, such as no-fault malpractice, mediation, or health courts, will go a long way both to reduce the cost of medical care, and fairly compensate more patients for medical errors at a significantly more expedient rate.

Lawyers are aware of these facts, and to their credit, are going on a preemptive offensive to head off tort reform. If I were the AMA, I would start pro-actively circulating some of the above talking points, rather than reacting to the trial lawyers.

**This post was originally published at KevinMD**

Guest Blog Post From South Africa: Haunted By Inaction

Many thanks to Dr. Bongi at All Things Amanzi for hosting me at his blog in South Africa. Here’s an excerpt from my post:

When I was a medical student rotating at a hospital that shall remain unnamed, I witnessed a medical error that has haunted me ever since. I was partnered with a team of residents in the inpatient pediatric unit, and late one night a two month old baby was accidentally infused with an entire bottle of Foscarnet instead of normal saline. The nurse who gave the infusion was working as a locum tenens – a traveling nurse who spent a few months here and there filling in for others at various hospitals…

To read the rest of the story, please click here.

The Flip Side of the Medical Malpractice Coin

American physicians are appropriately frustrated about the high cost of medical malpractice insurance, and the frequency with which false and/or exaggerated claims are filed against them. In the Philadelphia region, a spine surgeon must pay upwards of $300,000.00 a year in malpractice insurance. The law allows Obstetricians to be sued for mishandling the birthing process until the “child” is 20 years old. In many states, there is no cap on the amount of money awarded in a true case of negligence, and juries set the pay out – which can exceed 20 million dollars per verdict.

Interestingly, Texas instituted a new policy in which firm caps were placed on malpractice claims. The cost of medical malpractice insurance dropped precipitously, and over 7000 physicians flooded into the state.

I recently interviewed Canadian Senator Michael Kirby about the medical malpractice process in Canada, and he laughed at how litigious the American system is. He said that keeping the malpractice system from being abused is quite simple: fine plaintiffs who bring forth frivolous suits, set caps on pay outs, and allow awards to be set by judges, not juries. You can listen to our discussion here.

However, there is a flip side to this coin – when providers are permitted to practice without any real legal recourse. I was astonished to learn (from my blogging colleague across the pond, Dr. John Crippen), that in New Zealand midwives are permitted to practice without any form of malpractice insurance. In fact, a recent case demonstrated obvious negligence resulting in the death of a newborn baby. What recourse did the mother have? Apparently, her legal actions resulted in a payout of $2,000.00 and a promise of closer oversight of the practices of midwives.

Wow.

On the spectrum of “reasonableness” for medical malpractice policy, I believe the Canadians win, followed perhaps by Texans. What do you think?This post originally appeared on Dr. Val’s blog at RevolutionHealth.com.

Case Study: A Frivolous Law Suit

I’m at a medical conference in Houston this week (picking up some CME credits) and between lectures I’ve had some interesting conversations with my peers. Here’s my favorite story:

A patient underwent a total hip replacement surgery, had a normal post-operative course, was transferred for inpatient rehabilitation, progressed well and was discharged home. Several months later the patient decided to sue the hospital, claiming that he was sent home with a dislocated hip. The hospital couldn’t prove that the patient’s hip was not dislocated at the time of discharge because no x-ray was taken on that day. Of course, the only reason an x-ray would have been taken was if there were a strong suspicion of a fracture or dislocation (x-rays are not normally repeated on the day of discharge).

The hospital was found liable and will settle out of court for an undisclosed (but very large) amount.

My guess is that this case will cause:

1. The hospital to take unnecessary x-rays of all total hip patients on the day of discharge from now to eternity.

2. More dishonest patients to file frivolous law suits.

3. The local med/mal attorney population to spread the word about a new source of income.

4. Further cutbacks in the hospital’s charitable care due to funding deficits.

5. Someone with a hip replacement to buy a new Ferrari.

Sigh.This post originally appeared on Dr. Val’s blog at RevolutionHealth.com.

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